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Cloud Security: What You Need To Know To Lock It Down

Nerval's Lobster writes "IT security writer Steve Ragan writes: 'The word "cloud" is sometimes overused in IT—and lately, it's been tossed around more than a football during a tailgating party. Be that as it may, organizations still want to implement cloud-based initiatives. But securing assets once they're in the cloud is often easier said than done.' He then walks through some of the core concepts of cloud security, along with the companies operating in the space."

3 of 74 comments (clear)

  1. Lock it down by colinrichardday · · Score: 5, Interesting

    the only safe cloud is a dead cloud.

  2. Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Easy solution: Don't do it. There, I saved you having to RTFA which is just spam to drive hits to Slashdot's Cloud page.

  3. Relevance of responses by dave562 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    (Go ahead and mod this flamebait. I just need to rant)

    When I read the replies that always come up in these cloud discussions, I often wonder how many people on this forum are real IT professionals and how many are just people with opinions that were formed in a vacuum. When I read these cloud articles, I think about them in the context of large corporations with many divisions that are consolidating IT operations. I think of application silos, and business continuity/disaster recovery. I think of internal IT provisioning resources to departments and using technology like hardware and storage virtualization to be smarter about how they allocate resources. I think about rapid provisioning of test/dev and QA environments, or rapidly spinning up new servers to meet unanticipated growth or to address seasonal growth trends.

    So many of the comments seem to be coming from people whose entire concept of IT revolves around their home music collections, or working in a very small company that handles everything in house. The idea of giving up control to a cloud provider in that context seems reasonable. But there are large uses for "cloud" technologies that far surpass the tiny use cases in the SMB market. Denouncing everything to do with "cloud" shows a really immature understanding of how the technology is being deployed in the real world.

    If you are not up to speed on how virtualization and distributed computing environments can improve IT operations, your skills are probably stagnant and you either need to sharpen your skills, or pick another field. Whining about cloud being a buzzword is not doing you any good. It just making you look irrelevant and out of touch. Having said that, I will be the first to admit that it is an annoying buzzword. But pointing it out is lame at this point. Even a broken clock tells the right time twice a day. If you cannot see how cloud technologies are relevant to IT, you are probably in the wrong discipline.